An adenylate cyclase activity in Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa) roots was partially characterized. The enzyme activity remains in the supernatant fluid after centrifugation at 105,000 g and shows in crude extracts an apparent Mr of about 84,000. The enzyme is active with Mg2+ and Ca2+ as bivalent cations, and is inhibited by EGTA and by chlorpromazine. Calmodulin from bovine brain or spinach leaves activates this adenylate cyclase.
The relationship between the release of LH and the synthesis of DNA was studied in the anterior pituitary gland of castrated rats. Cell types were characterized immunocytochemically. Castration significantly (P less than 0.01) increased the concentration of LH in serum (1326%) and the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into pituitary DNA (72%). This was accompanied by an increment in the activity of the enzyme DNA polymerase-alpha (58%) and in the number of mitoses (from 2 +/- 0.1/mm2 in intact rats to 21 +/- 0.8/mm2 15 days after castration). Only 20% of the mitoses found in the pituitary gland of castrated rats were positively stained with the antiserum against the beta-subunit of LH. The other 80% did not stain either with LH antiserum or with antisera against the other pituitary hormones. There was a significant (P less than 0.01) increase in the number of LH cells in castrated rats (48%). All the changes produced in the anterior pituitary gland after castration were prevented by the administration of dihydrotestosterone. The results demonstrate that a stimulation of LH release is followed by an increase of DNA synthesis and cell proliferation of gonadotrophs in the anterior pituitary gland.
Adenylate cyclase catalytic subunits from Neurospora crassa membranes may interact with regulatory factors from membranes of bovine retinal rod outer segments (pretreated with N-ethylmaleimide), reconstituting a heterologous system which, in the presence of light, is catalytically active in assay mixtures containing MgATP.Maximal activation was observed at 550 nm. Transducin-depleted retinal membranes were not capable of reconstituting the heterologous light-stimulated adenylate cyclase system. Addition of a transducin preparation to depleted membrancs restored the reconstitution capacity of these membranes.A similar heterologous adenylate cyclase system was reconstituted with Neurospora and mouse retinal whole membranes (pretreated with N-ethylmaleimide). Membranes from mice suffering photoreceptor degeneration (rd homozygotes) did not reconstitute an heterologous adenylate cyclase system.Interaction between the photoreceptor rhodopsin and the GTP-binding protein transducin (G,) in retinal rod photoreceptors, is the first step in the vision cascade mechanism. Photolyzed rhodopsin determines a GDPICTP exchange at the level of transducin and the dissociation of the GTP-a, subunit complex, which in turn activates a cyclic-GMP phosphodiesterase. As a consequence of the hydrolysis of the cyclic nucleotide, cyclic-GMP-activated cation channels close Rhodopsin and transducin belong to two different families of plasma membrane proteins which are involved in the transduction of external signals into intracellular physical or chemical responses. The visual pigment protein and some hormone receptors such as the b,-adrenergic and the muscarinic receptors contain seven membrane-spanning regions; there are also some regional similarities between these proteins (for review see [4]).GTP-binding regulatory proteins (G-proteins) involved in transmembrane signaling are heterotrimers composed of a, p and y subunits. The tl subunits bind and hydrolyze GTP; they are substrates for ADP-ribosylation by bacterial toxins and they carry the specificity for receptors and effectors. These effectors may be adenylate cyclase [5], cyclic-GMP phospho-
In the anterior pituitary gland changes in prolactin synthesis and in the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA are coincident under several experimental conditions. We investigated whether these changes are obligatory, thus indicating a regulatory mechanism common to the synthesis of both macromolecules. Alternatively, the parallel changes may represent similar responses to various stimuli operating through different pathways. The administration of alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (alpha MpT) to rats stimulated the incorporation of [3H]leucine into prolactin and [3H]thymidine into DNA. When the effectiveness of oestrogen was suppressed by ovariectomy or by blockage of oestrogen receptors by the antioestrogen clomiphene, alpha MpT stimulated the synthesis of prolactin but not the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into pituitary DNA. The results clearly indicate two independent mechanisms regulating the synthesis of prolactin and DNA in the anterior pituitary gland.
Six Rhizobium meliloti mutants were isolated after Tn5-mediated mutagenesis as resistant to inhibition by a mixture of amino acids (serine, methionine, glycine and leucine). All were defective in adenylate cyclase activity and failed to form nodules in infected roots of Medicago sativa. Furthermore, like other nodulation mutants, they showed altered motility and increased secretion of exopolysaccharides; addition of cAMP to the growth medium abolished some of these phenotypic defects. The possibility that adenylate cyclase participates in the transduction of signals inducing nodulation is discussed.
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